Catching the Bamboo Train
Rural Cambodians cobbled old tank parts and scrap lumber into an ingenious way to get around
- By Russ Juskalian
- Photographs by Russ Juskalian
- Smithsonian magazine, January 2011, Subscribe
We were a few miles from the nearest village when we ran out of gas. The motor, a small thing perched on the back of a queen-size bamboo platform, spat out a few tubercular-sounding coughs and gave up. There were three of us riding this Frankenstein’s pump trolley, known in Cambodia as a norry, including my interpreter and the conductor, a short, elderly man with sunbaked skin and the permanent squint of failing eyesight. The morning was wretchedly hot, and in addition to a long-sleeved shirt and pants to block the sun, I wore a hat on my head and a scarf around my face. One could stay dry when moving along, the oncoming air acting like a mighty fan. But as the norry rolled to a slow stop, sweat bloomed on the skin almost instantly. I’d traveled across a broad stretch of Cambodia on the “bamboo train,” as this form of transportation is known in English, and now I considered what getting stuck here would mean.
The old man pointed down the line and mumbled in his native Khmer. “His house is nearby,” said Phichith Rithea, the 22-year-old interpreter. “He says it’s about 500 meters.” All I could see was heat-rippled air. Rithea pushed until he was ready to collapse, and the old man mumbled again. “He says we are nearly there,” Rithea translated as I took my turn pushing. The old man told me to walk on one of the rails to avoid snakes sunning on the metal ties. I slowed down as we approached a lone wooden train car converted to a house near where the old man had pointed. “That’s not it,” said Rithea. My head spun with heat and exhaustion. When we reached the old man’s house, we estimated that it was more than a mile from where we had broken down. The conductor filled our tank with a light-green liquid he kept in one-liter Coke bottles, and we were on our way, headed toward the capital, Phnom Penh.
If you have the time, money and inclination, you can travel almost 11,000 miles from London to Singapore exclusively by train—except in Cambodia. It wasn’t always so. In the 1920s, the French started work on a railroad that would eventually run 400 miles across Cambodia in two major sections: the first from the Thai border, via Battambang, to Phnom Penh; the second from Phnom Penh to the coastal city of Sihanoukville to the south. The rail was a single line of meter-wide track, but it did the job, and people used it.
The years after French colonial rule, which ended in 1953, were characterized by instability and then civil war. In 1975, the Khmer Rouge regime evacuated Phnom Penh, reducing the city’s population from more than two million people to 10,000 in a single day. From then until the regime fell, in 1979, an estimated 1.4 million Cambodians, or about 20 percent of the total population, died from execution, starvation or overwork. A new psychology took root: say nothing unnecessary, think no original thoughts, do nothing to stand out. In other words, to demonstrate the very qualities that make us human was to consign oneself to a torture center like the notorious S-21 prison, and eventually a mass grave. The Khmer Rouge had a slogan:
To spare you is no profit, to destroy you is no loss.
From 1979 to the late 1990s, a guerrilla war burned through the country. Remnants of the Khmer Rouge mined the railroad extensively and frequently ambushed trains. An official from the Cambodian Ministry of Public Works and Transport told me that the ministry still wouldn’t guarantee that the rails had been fully cleared of land mines.
I went to Cambodia last June to ride the norries, which I’d heard about on previous travels to Southeast Asia, and to get a glimpse of rural life along the way. Passenger trains hadn’t run in over a year. And for quite some time before that, there had been only one train a week, taking about 16 hours to cover a route that took only five hours by bus; at speeds just faster than a jog, the train tended to break down or derail. At the train yard in Phnom Penh, I saw rows of derelict cars, some with interiors overgrown with plants, others whose floors had entirely rotted out. All that was left was the norry.
A norry is basically a breadbox-size motor on top of a bed-size bamboo platform on top of two independent sets of metal wheels—all held together by gravity. It’s built from bamboo, old tank parts and motors ripped from broken motorbikes, rice harvesters and tractors. To accelerate, the driver slides the motor backward, using a stick as a lever, to create enough tension in the rubber belt to rotate the rear axle. Though no two norries are identical, a failing part can be swapped with a replacement in a few seconds. Norries are technically illegal but nonetheless vital and, if you know where to look, ubiquitous.
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Comments (6)
Last year we took a group of orphans on the norry, they loved it even when one car broke down and we overloaded the one still chugging away.
Posted by Terry kellogg on September 24,2011 | 09:36 PM
So great to see this getting a write up!
We had the pleasure of riding the Cambodian rails in November of 2010, and wrote about our experience here:
http://journal.goingslowly.com/2010/11/cambodias-bamboo-railway-part-one/
...if anyone is curious for more!
Tyler & Tara
www.goingslowly.com
Posted by Tyler & Tara on January 20,2011 | 01:15 PM
that is a cray way of life.
Posted by aubrey on January 11,2011 | 08:42 AM
I am amazed at the ingenuity of those people. I felt so very sorry for them during the terrible Pol Pot era and nearly wept when that Doctor,was murderd in this country, who had cleverly posed as a bicycle repairman to escape the torture and death he would have suffered if it was known that he was a highly educated man. After he arrived in the US, he returned every year to help the people.
I took a tour to Cambodia some years ago and developed a great interest and appreciation for them and their history. I said that I had some of the best food on that tour of any I have had on tours in many other countries.
I have always felt that it was terrible that the US and other Industrial nations did not condemn Pol Pot and his henchmen and push for his capture and trial in the International Court for all their horrible crimes.
Posted by Marion S. Kundiger on January 10,2011 | 03:41 AM
Very interesting... and sad in a way that a rail system has deteriorated to such a state. The hard copy of your magazine suggested sharing, so I posted a link to the article at: http://www.rypn.org/flimsies/. Hope that's OK.
Posted by ROSS PINYAN on December 23,2010 | 01:14 AM
Having worked in Cambodia for almost two years, I have come to believe that there are no people in the world more ingeneous about the use of motorized transportation than the Cambodians. They will strap a motor to anything or assemble anything that once had a motor and off they go. How about fifty people on that "queen sized bed" being pulled down the highway by something resembling a Rototiller? In Phnom Penh no Cambodian walks; they could not believe that we crazy Americans would like to walk from one place to another--and Phnom Penh is a great walking city. There must be three million motor scooters in a city of two million Cambodians and each scooter can be become a taxi for a couple of riels. And there is the limo of Cambodian transportation, the "tuk-tuk. We took "tuk-tuk" for our longer trips as we regarded the scooters a little too dangerous. Conventional taxis were generall used for the trip to the airport, although many used the tuk-tuk for that ride, as well.
Posted by Frank A. Tapparo on December 23,2010 | 06:40 PM